smurfslayer
Be vewwy, vewwy quiet. We’re hunting sasquatch77
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2016
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I’ll disagree slightly with @GCATX here.
while we do have more modern cars with more thorough and more critical maintenance aids, we still only have an oil “idiot light”, even though it looks like a gauge. By the time the idiot light goes off, you’re already way too low on oil and that’s one reason the vehicles now come with limp home mode.
However, warranty law is still stuck in the 70’s and if you aren’t checking your oil regularly, manufacturers can claim neglect in a warranty claim or lemon law suit. I’ll bet it is mentioned in the manual somewhere but I don’t need to be told to check the fluids or wear a seat belt or inspect the tires.
You’ll read a lot of keyboard warriors proclaiming ‘I’ll just drive it this way until it grenades’ or hear stories of a service employee recommending something similar. That would be a poor life choice. You might get away with it or you might get a regional rep or counsel who finds out about this and points out this is neglect / abuse and not covered under the factory or extended warranty.
I don’t honestly know if the trucks are filled with fluids to capacity, or just partially filled, but either way if it’s delivered to you with tires at 50psi, or anything amiss, that’s a PDI that failed to meet quality expectations.
You should not trust the PDI that allowed a mistake to make it to you.
while we do have more modern cars with more thorough and more critical maintenance aids, we still only have an oil “idiot light”, even though it looks like a gauge. By the time the idiot light goes off, you’re already way too low on oil and that’s one reason the vehicles now come with limp home mode.
However, warranty law is still stuck in the 70’s and if you aren’t checking your oil regularly, manufacturers can claim neglect in a warranty claim or lemon law suit. I’ll bet it is mentioned in the manual somewhere but I don’t need to be told to check the fluids or wear a seat belt or inspect the tires.
You’ll read a lot of keyboard warriors proclaiming ‘I’ll just drive it this way until it grenades’ or hear stories of a service employee recommending something similar. That would be a poor life choice. You might get away with it or you might get a regional rep or counsel who finds out about this and points out this is neglect / abuse and not covered under the factory or extended warranty.
I don’t honestly know if the trucks are filled with fluids to capacity, or just partially filled, but either way if it’s delivered to you with tires at 50psi, or anything amiss, that’s a PDI that failed to meet quality expectations.
You should not trust the PDI that allowed a mistake to make it to you.